National Electric Watch Cleaning Machine
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As nothing apart from the Swiss Made appears to be painted, as you say I don't think you've got a lot to loose. I'd start with saliva on a cotton bud and go from their.
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Hi everyone. I've been watching wristwatch revival on YouTube for the past 2 years and decided to take up the hobby. Also because I have a very old wristwatch that belonged to my great grandfather and the man who used to service it retired so I want to learn how to keep it going. Just so you know a bit more, I am a physicist and with sensor calibration and electronics so I am used to small finicky things. I got a cheap pocket watch I think it is a 285 movement. I was imagining I would only need to clean/oil but just my luck I need to replace the balance staff. Which is why I came here. I saw a few videos on replacing the part however I am not sure on where to buy the part. I found a part on ebay called " WATCH PART 1 BALANCER AXIS FOR UNIVERSAL WATCH 14" 285 high WATCH STOCK“ but how do I know if it fits in the watch? here is an image for the movement. I still haven't done anything on it. The watch seems to wind and everything but the balance seems to be good. I have a resin 3d printer and will try to print some tools, in engineering resin, to help replacing the staff as I don't currently have tools to replace the staff ( for me this is part of the fun). Any help and advice is much appreciated.
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So looking closer this looks like some sort of botched tube also.
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I bought a cheapo eBay watch which I wanted to try and “restore”. The movement is a Tissot 27B-21 which runs and looks very clean. The case and dial are a different matter! My main aim is to practice on the movement and try to get it running as well as I can. I’d like to end up with a usable watch at the end but I fear that the dial is a lost cause. It’s badly stained and scratched. One nice thing though is the old style Tissot logo which matches the logo on the inside of the case back. I know that cleaning dials is generally a non-starter for fear of making them worse; but it’s hard to imagine I could make this much worse. Does anyone have any suggestions as to how it might be worth trying to clean this? I was also wondering if I could go drastic and strip the lacquer completely, leaving the gold hour markers and logo intact. Sorry if this is heretical talk but, for me at least, the current dial is not usable. I can’t tell if someone has had a go at cleaning already between the 8 and 9? Thanks, Bill
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By Neverenoughwatches · Posted
When the crystal starts to rotate you know that you are on your way. Always rotate it, just pulling it upwards rarely works unless the crystal is a slight fit. With each little nip on the clamp the rotation gets a bit easier. I have cranked down hard on the clamp sometimes and was convinced the crystal would shatter. Like most materials,you push them to their limits in one attempt and they are liable to break, but small increments of pressure allows them to acclimatise to a situation.
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